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Journal ArticleDOI

Thermodynamic investigation of the barrier for heterogeneous nucleation on a fluid surface in comparison with a rigid surface.

Fatemeh Eslami, +1 more
- 18 Aug 2011 - 
- Vol. 115, Iss: 36, pp 10646-10653
TLDR
In this article, the authors used Gibbsian surface thermodynamics to provide a physical understanding for the case where the droplet is thermodynamically favored to nucleate heterogeneously.
Abstract
When a vapor phase is in contact with a solid or nonvolatile fluid, under conditions where the vapor is thermodynamically metastable to condensation, a droplet may nucleate from the vapor either homogenously within the vapor phase, or heterogeneously at the solid or fluid substrate interface. The case where the droplet is thermodynamically favored to nucleate heterogeneously is the subject of this article. The heterogeneous nucleation of a sessile drop on a soft surface has been studied many times experimentally and theoretically. It has been observed experimentally that heterogeneous nucleation happens faster on a soft surface in comparison with a rigid surface. Here we use Gibbsian surface thermodynamics to provide a physical understanding for this observation. Due to the difficulties of considering soft-elastic surfaces, we demonstrate that by considering only the fluidity of a surface (i.e., by considering a fluid surface as an infinitely soft material and comparing a fluid surface with a rigid surface), thermodynamics will predict that heterogeneous nucleation is easier on soft surfaces compared with rigid surfaces. We first investigate the effect of contact angle on the barrier for heterogeneous nucleation on rigid substrates at constant vapor phase pressure. Then we find a lower energy barrier for heterogeneous nucleation at a fluid surface in comparison with heterogeneous nucleation at a rigid surface which explains the faster nucleation on soft surfaces compared with rigid surfaces. Finally we inspect the role of each contribution to the energy barrier.

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Citations
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Enhanced Condensation on Lubricant-Impregnated Nanotextured Surfaces

TL;DR: It is shown how condensate-solid pinning can be reduced by proper implementation of nanotexture, and a hierarchical micro-nanoscale texture on a surface and impregnating it with an appropriate lubricant is designed.
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Wetting Transition from the Cassie–Baxter State to the Wenzel State on Textured Polymer Surfaces

TL;DR: The energy barrier in the wetting transition from the Cassie-Baxter state to the Wenzel state was dominated by the competition between the energy barrier and external forces, particularly the Laplace pressure in the present case.
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Elastocapillarity: Surface Tension and the Mechanics of Soft Solids

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors outline the theory of surface stresses from both mechanical and thermodynamic perspectives, emphasizing the relationship between surface stress and surface energy, and highlight how surface stresses cause dramatic departures from classic theories for wetting (Young-Dupre), adhesion (Johnson-Kendall-Roberts), and composites (Eshelby).
Journal ArticleDOI

Static wetting on deformable substrates, from liquids to soft solids

TL;DR: In this paper, a linear-elastic model incorporating an out-of-plane restoring force due to solid surface tension was recently shown to accurately predict the equilibrium shape of a thin elastic film due to a large sessile droplet.
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Durability of a lubricant-infused Electrospray Silicon Rubber surface as an anti-icing coating

TL;DR: In this article, a heptadecafluorodecyl trimethoxysilane-fluorinated hierarchically micro-structured silicone rubber surface was prepared by electrospray method coupled with phase separation which had a contact angle of the lubricant θls(a) = 0°.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

Contact angles of liquids at deformable solid surfaces

TL;DR: In this paper, the relation between the contact angles and the interfacial tensions for a liquid droplet resting on a solid surface is examined and the limitations of Young's equation and Neumann's triangle are defined.
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